US6002298A - Reconstituted frequency modulation with feedforward demodulator - Google Patents
Reconstituted frequency modulation with feedforward demodulator Download PDFInfo
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- US6002298A US6002298A US09/096,412 US9641298A US6002298A US 6002298 A US6002298 A US 6002298A US 9641298 A US9641298 A US 9641298A US 6002298 A US6002298 A US 6002298A
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03C—MODULATION
- H03C3/00—Angle modulation
- H03C3/02—Details
- H03C3/06—Means for changing frequency deviation
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- the present invention is related to angle-modulation recovery or estimation processes and, more particularly, to a feedforward demodulator.
- a demodulator can obtain an enhanced estimate of the angle-modulation imposed on a transmitted Radio Frequency ("RF”) or Intermediate Frequency (“IF”) carrier when the communications channel adds distortions such as noise to the transmitted signal.
- RF Radio Frequency
- IF Intermediate Frequency
- Angle-demodulation can be either non-coherent or coherent.
- non-coherent angle-modulation recovery or estimation uses a band-pass filter 101, a phase differentiator 102, and a low-pass filter/integrator 103.
- Band-pass filter 101 pre-conditions an input signal by passing through the frequency band occupied by the desired signal, s(t), and rejecting all other frequencies. However, since some of the distortion, W(t), occupies the same frequency band as s(t), band-pass filter 101 passes both the desired signal, s(t), and the distortion, N(t).
- the output of band-pass filter 101 can thus be modeled as
- This filtered IF signal, X(t) is then input to a phase differentiator 102.
- the output is ⁇ 1 '(t), as shown.
- ⁇ (t) is generated at the transmitter source as
- angle-modulation systems may employ pre-emphasis/de-emphasis filters that operate on the message signal and the estimated message respectively to help offset the adverse effects of noise. However, without loss of generality, these filters can be modeled as incorporated into our message signal and low-pass filter/integrator 103.
- FIG. 2 illustrates an equivalent model of phase differentiator 102.
- An analytic signal extractor 201 generates an analytic signal, X + (t). This signal contains both the imposed modulation and distortion. It can be represented as
- is the envelope of X + (t), and ⁇ is a constant phase offset.
- ⁇ c represents the center frequency, which is assumed to be known within a small tuning error.
- ⁇ (t) represents a phase angle distortion from the imperfect receive channel.
- ⁇ e ⁇ c - ⁇ c is a small error in tuning frequency.
- X(t) can be represented in rectangular form as
- This estimate contains a bias term, 2 ⁇ e , and an error term, ⁇ '(t). It can easily be converted to units of Hertz by scaling with the factor 1/2 ⁇ .
- FIGS. 3(a) and 3(b) demonstrate this tuning error.
- FIG. 3(a) shows correct tuning frequency;
- FIG. 3(b) tuning error offset.
- dashed lines represent a magnitude response 301 of band-pass filter 101. The corners of the dashed lines show the lower and upper cut-off frequencies of band-pass filter 101.
- Solid lines represent a modulated signal spectrum 302.
- band-pass filter 101 causes little or no distortion, since modulated signal spectrum 302 falls entirely within the pass-band between the cut-off frequencies.
- magnitude response 301 of band-pass filter 101 distorts modulated signal spectrum 302.
- phase lock loop PLL
- FMFB FM with feedback
- the FMFB demodulator employs low-pass filtering and integration within the device itself. However, further low-pass filtering and integration processes can be performed externally to the FMFB demodulator. Thus the FMFB demodulator replaces phase differentiator 102 of FIG. 1. If the negative of the derivative of the angle of the unit-envelope prediction signal, s + *(t), closely follows the derivative of the angle of the modulated constituent of input signal, X + (t), then the output of a complex multiplier 400
- band-pass filter 401 contains a signal constituent with a reduced modulation index.
- This message-bearing constituent of the signal, X e (t) can pass through a band-pass filter 401, which is narrower than band-pass filter 101.
- the analytic constituent of the distortion component when N + (t) and s + (t) are not highly correlated and s + (t) has sufficient strength, band-pass filter 401 passes less of N + (t).
- band-pass filter 401 is a pair of identical real-valued low-pass filters, each operating on the real and imaginary components of X e (t).
- the input and output of band-pass filter 401 are complex. Since band-pass filter 401 operates at an IF of 0 Hz, both the input and output are complex envelope signals. As such, a rate of-change of phase module 402 can be implemented as previously described. Passing this result to a low-pass filter/integrator 403 results in the reduced index frequency modulation estimate, ⁇ FB '(t).
- ⁇ FB '(t) can be viewed as an error signal, which should approach some small level.
- ⁇ FB (t) By integrating this "error signal" to obtain ⁇ FB (t) and by controlling sensitivity with a feedback gain 404, K, we can maintain a good quality prediction signal, s + *(t).
- a negating angle-modulator 405 simply generates the unit-envelope prediction signal,
- both FMFB and PLL demodulators reduce the distortion, ⁇ (t), in large ⁇ systems.
- these methods reduce the FM threshold effect, where a rapid decrease in output signal-to-noise ratio ("SNR") occurs for small decreases in input SNR.
- SNR output signal-to-noise ratio
- This threshold occurs at or about 10 dB input SNR. Threshold improvements from 3 to 7 dB or more have been reported.
- Another advantage of the coherent method is that the adverse effects of a tuning error, ⁇ e , can be mitigated, as coherent angle-demodulation tracks the center frequency, ⁇ c , thereby providing automatic tuning.
- Coherent angle-demodulation has disadvantages.
- processing with a particular combination of feedback gain 404, band-pass filter 401, and low-pass filter/integrator 403 can reduce the noise substantially.
- Such processing can also cause excessive distortion of the original modulation.
- the coherent angle-demodulator provides no mechanism to compensate for this distortion.
- simulation results are presented for the FM demodulation of a pulsed carrier with imposed frequency modulation to demonstrate typical angle-demodulation.
- a discrete-time implementation employed the common rate, F s , of two samples per second. (This arbitrary but convenient choice of sample rate for simulations leads to a Nyquist bandwidth of 1 Hz.)
- the results come from a backward-difference FM demodulator with no explicit low-pass post filtering.
- This demodulator is described in detail by the present inventor in "Numerical FM Demodulation Enhancements," Rome Laboratory Technical Report RL-TR-96-91, June 1996.
- the imposed FM modulation was a linearly varying instantaneous frequency, from approximately -0.08 radians, to +0.08 radians.
- Additive white Gaussian noise (“AWGN”) was combined with the pre-pulsed carrier at a SNR of 30 dB. Pulses were 200 samples in duration. A total of 100 pulses were generated, band-pass filtered, demodulated, and the results averaged for comparison to the actual imposed FM modulation.
- the band-pass filter was implemented in complex form with a finite-impulse response ("FIR") filter of 129 coefficients resulting from the Hanning windowed method of FIR filter design. A cutoff frequency of 0.25/4 Hz was used.
- FIR finite-impulse response
- RIMS root-mean-square
- one object of the present invention is to provide a system and method to estimate the angle-modulation imposed on a transmitted RF or IF carrier that overcomes the drawbacks of the prior art.
- Another object of the present invention is to provide a system and method of angle-demodulation that takes advantage of the high correlation of message signals/modulated signals at consecutive instances.
- Still another object of the present invention is to provide a method or system that avoids the distorting effects of off-centering of input signals and undesirable attenuation and phase changes near band edges, both of which adversely affect angle-demodulation, by increasing the width of the prior-art band-pass filter.
- a further object of the present invention is to provide a method or system of coherent angle-demodulation that avoids excessive distortion of original modulations in large ⁇ systems.
- Still a further object of the present invention is to provide a method or system of angle-demodulation that avoids a commensurate reduction in the strength of recovered modulation signals where only the reduction of additive distortion is sought.
- the present invention provides apparatus and method for estimating the angle-modulation imposed on a transmitted Radio Frequency (RF) or Intermediate Frequency (IF) carrier.
- the method estimates angle-modulation when communications channels add distortions such as noise to transmitted signals.
- the system provides reconstituted frequency modulation from a feedforward demodulator. The goal is to reduce the modulation index of a desired signal and to employ a narrower band-pass filter that passes this signal while rejecting the distortion that accompanies it.
- a plurality of stages, 1 through M exist within the system. Stages 2 through M contain the same components, although filter coefficients and alignment delays may differ from stage to stage.
- Stage 1 of the demodulator differs slightly from the remaining stages, since the only input required by Stage 1 is a complex envelope signal that contains both the desired signal and the distortion added by the channel.
- the output of any particular stage of the demodulator consists of complex envelope signals and a real FM estimate.
- Each output from a stage p serves as input to stage p+1, for 2 ⁇ p+1 ⁇ M.
- the phase modulation estimate can be an output of Stage M.
- a system for estimating angle-modulation imposed on a transmitted electromagnetic signal comprises a feedforward demodulator for reducing the modulation index of a signal component modulated by a message that further comprises; at least one band-pass filtering (BPF) module for passing the signal component while rejecting distortion components; at least one FM demodulator/low-pass filtering module (FMD-LPF) for performing, after processing by the at least one BPF module, rate-of-change of phase measuring and low-pass filtering commensurate with the message's bandwidth; at least one alignment delay (TAD) module for delaying signal inputs by amounts equal to the sum of the delays introduced by the at least one BPF module and a low-pass filtering (LPF) portion of the at least one FMD-LPF module; at least one summation module for summing TAD and FMD-LPF outputs for the signal component; at least one integrator for inverting rate-of-change of phase measurements for the signal component; and at least one exponential modulation
- BPF band-pass filter
- a system for estimating angle-modulation imposed on an electromagnetic signal comprises a plurality of stages 1 through M: (i) stage 1 of the system further comprises an input for receiving an incoming complex envelope signal that contains both (1) a desired component modulated by a message and (2) additive distortion; and (ii) stages 2 through M of the system each further comprise an input for receiving the incoming complex envelope signal from a previous stage and an output for providing the incoming complex envelope signal to a subsequent stage, the output further comprising estimates of (1) a real FM signal and (2) a conjugate of the incoming complex envelope signal; the output of any particular stage p comprising at least one aligned signal that serves as input to a following stage if present; the at least one aligned signal being aligned within multiple stages, thereby allowing feed-forward; and a demodulator correcting signal distortion by iteratively estimating the message from stage to stage.
- a method including a plurality of stages, for estimating angle-modulation of an electromagnetic signal, comprises the steps of: band-pass filtering a complex envelope signal derived from the electromagnetic signal to reject distortion; measuring a rate-of-change of phase of the complex envelope signal after the step of band-pass filtering; low-pass filtering the rate-of-change of phase commensurate with bandwidth of a message component of the complex envelope signal; the steps of band-pass filtering, measuring, and low-pass filtering yielding a real signal derived from the complex envelope signal; setting for each stage a first delay for the complex envelope signal equal to any delay introduced in the steps of band-pass and low-pass filtering; for all stages except a first, setting a second delay for the real signal equal to the first delay; for each stage after the first, summing (1) the real signal as modified by the second delay if present and prior stages if any and (2) an output from the steps of band-pass and low-pass filtering; integrating the real signal as modified by the second
- the present invention provides a system and method for estimating the angle-modulation imposed on a transmitted RF or IF carrier when the communications channel adds distortion such as noise to transmitted signals.
- Angle-demodulation of the present invention provides reconstituted frequency modulation with a feedforward demodulator, hereinafter an "R-FMFF demodulator.”
- the goal of the R-FMFF demodulator of the present invention is to reduce the modulation index of the desired signal component and to employ a narrower band-pass filter to pass this signal component while rejecting the distortion component.
- the present invention offers the same benefits as prior-art FMFB demodulators as it overcomes their disadvantages and limitations.
- the original modulation can be unacceptably distorted.
- This distortion follows from setting the bandwidth of the band-pass filter to be narrower than the bandwidth needed to process the reduced-index signal.
- the present invention comprises M stages, where M>1, provides a mechanism to compensate for this distortion by iteratively estimating from stage to stage. This iterative estimation reduces the final modulation index so that the band-pass filter in Stage M is wide enough to pass the reduced-index signal and narrow enough to reject the additive distortion.
- An additional advantage of the present invention is that modulation reconstitution occurs for each stage that follows the initial stage. Distortion is thus decreased, and not at the expense of reducing signal modulation. Thus the present invention not only minimizes additive distortion; it also maximizes recovered signal strength. Subsequently, at input SNR values above threshold, the invention can outperform the coherent and non-coherent methods of angle-modulation recovery of the prior art.
- Another advantage of the invention is that it continues to provide threshold reduction for various input signal scenarios, where ⁇ is decreased, including scenarios where the modulated signal is narrow-band.
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of prior-art angle-modulation estimation components.
- FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a prior-art analytic representation of a phase differentiator.
- FIG. 3(a) shows frequency domain representations of the correct tuning frequency for a prior-art band-pass filter.
- FIG. 3(b) shows frequency domain representations of a tuning error offset for a prior-art band-pass filter.
- FIG. 4 shows a prior-art analytic representation and implementation of a FMFB demodulator.
- FIG. 5 is a graphical representation of recovered FM modulation as measured by a standard angle-demodulator.
- FIG. 6 is a graphical representation of recovered FM modulation error resulting from a standard angle-demodulator.
- FIG. 7 is a block diagram of a reconstituted-frequency-modulation-with-feedforward demodulator ("R-FMFF") of the present invention.
- FIG. 8 is a graphical representation of recovered FM modulation as measured by a R-FMFF.
- FIG. 9 is a graphical representation of recovered FM modulation measurement error from a R-FMFF demodulator.
- a R-FMFF demodulator 700 of the present invention signals are fed forward from stage to stage and within each stage, rather than fed back to track the input. Shown in FIG. 7 are stages 1 through M (or 1, 2, and M).
- the input to this system is the complex envelope signal, X(t), which contains both the desired signal constituent, s(t), and the additive distortion constituent, N(t).
- Each of Stages 2 through M of the R-FMFF demodulator includes: (1) a band-pass filter (“BPF”), shown as BPF 701, 702, 703; (2) a FM demodulator-low-pass filter (“FMD-LPF”), shown as FMD-LPF 711, 712, 713; and (3) an alignment delay (“TAD”), shown as TAD 721, 722, 723, 724, 725.
- BPF band-pass filter
- FMD-LPF FM demodulator-low-pass filter
- TAD alignment delay
- Stage 1 of R-FMFF demodulator 700 differs slightly from the remaining stages, since the only necessary input to this stage is X(t).
- the output of any particular stage, p, of R-FMFF demodulator 700 comprises the complex envelope signals, X p (t), and s p *(t), and the real FM estimate, ⁇ p '(t). These serve as inputs to stage p+1, for 2 ⁇ p+1 ⁇ M.
- the phase modulation estimate, ⁇ M (t) can optionally be the output of Stage M, either in lieu of or in addition to s M *(t), as an application requires.
- R-FMFF demodulator 700 comprises at least two (2) stages (FIG. 7 shows more than two (2) stages).
- R-FMFF demodulator 700 is the same as that of the FMFB demodulator, namely, to reduce the modulation index of the desired signal component, s(t), and to employ a narrower band-pass filter to pass this signal component and reject the distortion component, N(t).
- each of the band-pass filters, BPF1 701 through BPFM 703, have a bandwidth narrower than the bandwidth of the zero-IF input signal, X(t).
- these band-pass filters are implemented as a pair of identical real low-pass filters operating on the real and imaginary components to be processed.
- the FM demodulation-low-pass filter of each stage perform both rate-of-change of phase measurement and low-pass filtering commensurate with the message signal bandwidth, ⁇ m .
- the alignment delays, TAD1 721 through TADM 725 delay the real or complex signal inputs by amounts equal to the delay introduced by the BPF and the LPF of a particular stage.
- TADp provides a delay equal to the sum of the delays introduced by BPFp and the low-pass filter portion of FMD-LPFp.
- Integrators 741, 742, 743 one for each stage, invert the rate-of-change of phase measurement (i.e., the FM demodulation).
- ⁇ p is the delay introduced by the TADp process.
- the complex multiplication of Stage 2 employs s 1 (t), an initial estimate of s(t), to reduce the modulation index of s(t).
- a reconstitution or recombination with ⁇ 1 '(t- ⁇ 2 ) in ⁇ 761 replaces the modulation extracted by a complex multiplier 751, resulting in ⁇ 22 '(t).
- This process of reducing and reconstituting the modulation index is repeated by each following stage.
- R-FMFF demodulator 700 therefore carries out an iterative process that refines the output estimates, s p *(t) and ⁇ p '(t).
- BPF1 701 through BPFM 703 and FMD-LPFI 711 through FMD-LPFM 713 R-FMFF demodulator 700 enhances the angle-modulation recovery process in many modulation and additive distortion scenarios where standard methods fail.
- R-FMFF demodulator 700 both discrete-time (numerical) implementations (“RNFMFF”) and analog-time (continuous) implementations (“RAFMFF”) are possible.
- RNFMFF discrete-time (numerical) implementations
- RAFMFF analog-time (continuous) implementations
- the RNFMFF demodulator can employ symmetric FIR filters with odd coefficient lengths, greatly simplifying TAD implementation and increasing accuracy.
- Another embodiment uses a reconstituted-FM-with-feedback demodulator (or equivalent) in stage 1.
- a reconstituted-FM-with-feedback demodulator or equivalent
- this modulation tracking device can force the following stages of the R-FMFF demodulator to converge rapidly to an accurate modulation estimate. This convergence can also help where ⁇ is small and the spectrum of m(t) contains significant energy at frequencies below ⁇ m Hz.
- RNFMFF demodulator simulation has been tested against the same 100 pulsed carriers used to demonstrate the problems of the prior art. This test allowed for direct comparison to the simulated standard angle-demodulation process. As before, the recovered modulations were averaged together to represent the measured modulation. A backward difference FM demodulator was used in each stage, with no explicit low-pass filtering. The band-pass filter in each stage was identical to that in the simulated standard demodulator.
- FIG. 8 shows the recovered FM modulation as measured by the RNFMFF demodulator.
- FIG. 9 shows the error in measuring the recovered FM modulation resulting from the RNFMFF demodulator.
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Abstract
Description
X(t)={s(t)}.sub.BPF +N(t),
φ(t)=k.sub.p ·m.sub.PM (t),
X.sub.+ (t)=|A(t)|exp{j·[2πƒ.sub.c t+φ(t)+η(t)-θ]}.
z.sub.- (t)=exp{-j·2πƒ.sub.c t},
X(t)=|a(t)|exp{j·[2πƒ.sub.e t+φ(t)+η(t)-θ]},
X(t)=X.sub.i (t)+jX.sub.q (t),
φ.sub.1 '(t)=2πƒ.sub.e +φ'(t)+η'(t) (radians per second).
φ'(t)={φ.sub.1 '(t)}.sub.LPF ={2πƒ.sub.e +2πΔƒ·m.sub.FM (t)+η'(t)}.sub.LPF.
φ(t)={2πƒ.sub.e t+k.sub.p ·m.sub.PM (t)+η(t)+θ.sub.c }.sub.LPF,
s.sub.+ (t)=|a(t)|exp{j·[2πƒ.sub.c t+φ(t)-θ]},
X.sub.e (t)=X.sub.+ (t)·s.sub.+ *(t)
s.sub.+ *(t)=exp{-j·[2πƒ.sub.c t+Kφ.sub.FB (t]},
Claims (24)
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Cited By (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US20040119548A1 (en) * | 2002-12-23 | 2004-06-24 | Karlquist Richard K. | Phase locked loop demodulator and demodulation method using feed-forward tracking error compensation |
WO2015143274A1 (en) * | 2014-03-21 | 2015-09-24 | Dynaspot Corp. | A filter that minimizes in-band noise and maximizes detection sensitivity of exponentially-modulated signals |
US10320365B2 (en) | 2014-03-21 | 2019-06-11 | Dynaspot Corp. | Filter that minimizes in-band noise and maximizes detection sensitivity of exponentially-modulated signals |
US11025230B2 (en) | 2014-03-21 | 2021-06-01 | Dynaspot Corp. | Filter that minimizes in-band noise and maximizes detection sensitivity of exponentially-modulated signals |
US11621701B2 (en) | 2014-03-21 | 2023-04-04 | Dynaspot Corp. | Filter that minimizes in-band noise and maximizes detection sensitivity of exponentially-modulated signals |
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US4817116A (en) * | 1984-04-17 | 1989-03-28 | Nec Corporation | Digital radio communication system utilizing quadrature modulated carrier waves |
US4849706A (en) * | 1988-07-01 | 1989-07-18 | International Business Machines Corporation | Differential phase modulation demodulator |
US5511097A (en) * | 1993-01-08 | 1996-04-23 | Nec Corporation | Delay detection circuit |
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1998
- 1998-06-11 US US09/096,412 patent/US6002298A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Patent Citations (3)
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US4817116A (en) * | 1984-04-17 | 1989-03-28 | Nec Corporation | Digital radio communication system utilizing quadrature modulated carrier waves |
US4849706A (en) * | 1988-07-01 | 1989-07-18 | International Business Machines Corporation | Differential phase modulation demodulator |
US5511097A (en) * | 1993-01-08 | 1996-04-23 | Nec Corporation | Delay detection circuit |
Cited By (8)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US20040119548A1 (en) * | 2002-12-23 | 2004-06-24 | Karlquist Richard K. | Phase locked loop demodulator and demodulation method using feed-forward tracking error compensation |
US6765435B2 (en) * | 2002-12-23 | 2004-07-20 | Agilent Technologies, Inc. | Phase locked loop demodulator and demodulation method using feed-forward tracking error compensation |
WO2015143274A1 (en) * | 2014-03-21 | 2015-09-24 | Dynaspot Corp. | A filter that minimizes in-band noise and maximizes detection sensitivity of exponentially-modulated signals |
US9941862B2 (en) | 2014-03-21 | 2018-04-10 | Dynaspot Corp. | Filter that minimizes in-band noise and maximizes detection sensitivity of exponentially-modulated signals |
US10320365B2 (en) | 2014-03-21 | 2019-06-11 | Dynaspot Corp. | Filter that minimizes in-band noise and maximizes detection sensitivity of exponentially-modulated signals |
US11025230B2 (en) | 2014-03-21 | 2021-06-01 | Dynaspot Corp. | Filter that minimizes in-band noise and maximizes detection sensitivity of exponentially-modulated signals |
US11621701B2 (en) | 2014-03-21 | 2023-04-04 | Dynaspot Corp. | Filter that minimizes in-band noise and maximizes detection sensitivity of exponentially-modulated signals |
US12047049B2 (en) | 2014-03-21 | 2024-07-23 | Dynaspot Corp. | Filter that minimizes in-band noise and maximizes detection sensitivity of exponentially-modulated signals |
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